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UGC NET Paper 1 - Distribution of Terms

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UGC NET Paper 1 • Concept 5

Distribution of Terms

Unit 6 • Chapter 1

Understanding Term Coverage in Logic

Topic 5: When Terms Apply to All vs. Some Members

📖 Based on Ankit Sharma's Book
UGC NET Paper 1 Volume 5 - Logical Reasoning Unlocked

+91 9645160045
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CONCEPT 5

What is Distribution?

Understanding Term Coverage

📖 What is Distribution?
Distribution refers to whether a statement applies to all members of a group (Distributed) or only some members (Undistributed).

🔍 Understanding the Concept

✅ Distributed Term

A term is distributed when the statement refers to ALL members of that class or group.

Example: "All dogs are animals" → The term "dogs" is distributed because we're talking about ALL dogs.

❌ Undistributed Term

A term is undistributed when the statement refers to only SOME members of that class or group.

Example: "All dogs are animals" → The term "animals" is undistributed because we're NOT talking about ALL animals, only some.

📊 Visual Comparison

ALL

DISTRIBUTED

Refers to every member of the group

UNDISTRIBUTED

Refers to only some members of the group

💡 Simple Example to Remember:

"All students passed the exam."

  • StudentsDistributed (We're talking about ALL students)
  • PassedUndistributed (Not ALL people who passed, just these students)
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Distribution Rules: A & E

Universal Propositions

A Universal Affirmative (All S are P)

"All S are P"

SUBJECT (S)

DISTRIBUTED

Applies to ALL S

PREDICATE (P)

UNDISTRIBUTED

Does NOT apply to ALL P

📝 Example:

"All cats are mammals."

  • Subject "cats"Distributed (ALL cats)
  • Predicate "mammals"Undistributed (NOT all mammals, only some)

📌 Rule for A: Subject is distributed, Predicate is undistributed.

E Universal Negative (No S are P)

"No S are P"

SUBJECT (S)

DISTRIBUTED

Applies to ALL S

PREDICATE (P)

DISTRIBUTED

Applies to ALL P

📝 Example:

"No birds are fish."

  • Subject "birds"Distributed (ALL birds)
  • Predicate "fish"Distributed (ALL fish are excluded)

📚 Critical Exam Point: In Universal Negative Proposition, both the terms are distributed. Asked in Exam

📌 Rule for E: BOTH Subject and Predicate are distributed.

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Distribution Rules: I & O

Particular Propositions

I Particular Affirmative (Some S are P)

"Some S are P"

SUBJECT (S)

UNDISTRIBUTED

Only SOME S

PREDICATE (P)

UNDISTRIBUTED

Only SOME P

📝 Example:

"Some birds are mammals."

  • Subject "birds"Undistributed (Only SOME birds)
  • Predicate "mammals"Undistributed (Only SOME mammals)

📚 Critical Exam Point: In a proposition which is particular affirmative, neither the subject nor the predicate is distributed. Asked in Exam

Exam Example: "Some birds are mammals" is a particular affirmative proposition and it distributes neither subject term nor predicate term. Asked in Exam

📌 Rule for I: NEITHER Subject NOR Predicate is distributed.

O Particular Negative (Some S are not P)

"Some S are not P"

SUBJECT (S)

UNDISTRIBUTED

Only SOME S

PREDICATE (P)

DISTRIBUTED

Excluded from ALL P

📝 Example 1:

"Some girls are not students."

  • Subject "girls"Undistributed (Only SOME girls)
  • Predicate "students"Distributed (Excluded from ALL students)

📚 Critical Exam Point: Asked in Exam

Example: "Some girls are not students" — Here Predicate term students is distributed and Subject term girls is undistributed.

Example: "Some men are not married" — here the predicate is distributed.

📌 Rule for O: Subject is undistributed, Predicate is distributed.

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🧠 The ASEBINOP Memory Trick

Never Forget Distribution Rules!

🎯 Master This Pattern: ASEBINOP

This simple pattern tells you which terms are distributed in each proposition type:

A

Subject only

S P

S

(Stands for Subject)

E

Both

S P

B

(Stands for Both)

I

Neither

S P

N

(Stands for Neither)

O

Predicate only

S P

P

(Stands for Predicate)

📊 Quick Visual Summary

A

Subject only

E

Both

I

Neither

O

Predicate only

💡 Pro Tip: Just remember "ASEBINOP" and you'll instantly know which terms are distributed in any proposition! This trick has helped thousands of students ace their exams.

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📝 Practical Inference Example

Applying Distribution in Syllogisms

🎯 Exam Example: EAE Syllogism

Premise 1 (E)

No musicians are Greeks.

Premise 2 (A)

All traders are Musicians.

Therefore

Conclusion (E)

No traders are Greeks.

Mood of this Syllogism

E + A + E = EAE

🔍 Step-by-Step Distribution Analysis

1

Identify the conclusion type

The conclusion is: "No traders are Greeks"
This is an E proposition (Universal Negative)

2

Apply ASEBINOP rule for E

According to ASEBINOP: E = Both
In an E proposition, both terms are distributed

3

Identify the terms in the conclusion

Minor Term (Subject)

traders

DISTRIBUTED

Major Term (Predicate)

Greeks

DISTRIBUTED

✅ Final Answer:

Therefore, the minor term of the conclusion is distributed. Asked in Exam

💡 Key Takeaway: When analyzing conclusions in syllogisms, always check the proposition type first (A, E, I, or O), then apply the ASEBINOP rule to determine which terms are distributed. This is a common exam question pattern!

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📝 Complete Summary

Distribution Rules at a Glance

📐 Distribution Rules - Complete Reference

Type Form Subject Predicate Memory
A All S are P Distributed Undistributed Subject only
E No S are P Distributed Distributed Both
I Some S are P Undistributed Undistributed Neither
O Some S are not P Undistributed Distributed Predicate only

🎯 Critical Exam Points to Remember

  • E Proposition: Both terms are distributed Asked in Exam
  • I Proposition: Neither subject nor predicate is distributed Asked in Exam
  • O Proposition: Predicate is distributed, Subject is undistributed Asked in Exam
  • ASEBINOP: The ultimate memory trick for all distributions
  • Distribution = Whether a term applies to ALL or SOME members

🧠 Final Memory Pattern

A

S only

E

Both

I

Neither

O

P only

A-S-E-B-I-N-O-P

Master this pattern and you'll never forget distribution rules!

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Based on Ankit Sharma's Book - UGC NET Paper 1 Volume 5
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